Eritrea turns 21. Published May 28 2014. But for at least 1000 imprisoned Christians there's little to celebrate. A railway bridge in remote Eritrea. Courtesy Open Doors International. The tiny state of Eritrea flanked by Ethiopia on one side and the Red Sea on the other celebrated its 21st birthday May 24 its Independence Day a public holiday.Yet beneath the official festivities Eritrea's 6 million people live under a regime that has earned a reputation as the most repressive in Africa. Now an exiled human-rights group Release Eritrea reports that more than 1000 Christians are currently in detention. The group bases its tally on phone calls to friends and colleagues in the country.The jailed Christians are members of unofficial or 'unregistered' churches which are under persistent attack from the regime. "Our church leaders who were taken to prison in 2003/2004 have been detained for over 10 years now" said Release Eritrea Director Berhane Asmelash. "Many continue to suffer health problems although we praise God when we hear reports of their resolute faith and good spirit." An underground church leader who has seen many in his congregation disappear into prison or exile said Eritrea's antagonism to Christianity is beginning to have generational effects."We trust God to safeguard them but times are tough for their families their elderly parents are dying and the young children they left behind are now coming of age fatherless" the church leader said. Officially Eritrea is a secular state in which all citizens can practise their faith freely. Three main Christian denominations, the Orthodox Catholic and Lutheran churches, and Islam are officially recognized. However as Amnesty International has reported in 2002 the government required all minority religious groups to register and to hand over information about their finances and members. Most refused and in 2003 the government began a crackdown against the growing evangelical churches with church members arbitrarily detained during "home-worshipping" or at weddings. Amnesty said many were tortured or ill-treated in an attempt to force them to stop worshipping. Perhaps the worst afflicted have been members of the sect of Jehovah's Witnesses who have been detained for refusing military service. They were stripped of their citizenship. Ousted Orthodox Patriarch Abune Antonios in a 2006 photo. Courtesy Open Doors International. In 2007 the head of the Orthodox Church Patriarch Abune Antonious was removed from his position after criticising the Eritrean government for interference in church activities. Two priests accompanied by government security agents entered the Patriarch's residence and confiscated his personal pontifical insignia. He was replaced by Abune Dioskoros, a development orchestrated by the Eritrean government. Patriarch Antonios who has never been charged with any offence remains under house arrest and strict state surveillance. Tens of thousands of young Eritreans have fled the country escaping across the border to Ethiopia or Sudan to face a difficult and uncertain future. Others have attempted to reach Europe some of them drowning in the Mediterranean Sea on smuggler ships. Eritrea is ruled by President Isaias Afewerki who led the Eritrean People's Liberation Front a movement that won independence from Ethiopia in 1991 after 30 years of armed conflict. Then hailed as a hero he soon turned dictator first repressing soldiers demanding pay then turning on religious dissenters and critics within the party. Today the Eritrean regime tolerates no dissent of any kind there is no free media no university and even the ruling party, renamed the People's Front for Freedom and Democracy, has not held a party conference for years.

Boko Haram kidnaps more girls; outrage mounts. Published May 07 2014. by Illia DjadiThe number of Nigerian girls abducted by Boko Haram continues to increase as does global outrage. Between eight and 11 more teen-aged girls were kidnapped May 4 by the Islamist group which on April 14 abducted more than 230 schoolgirls most of them reported to be Christian from the northeastern town of Chibok.According to local sources a group of heavily armed men stormed the village of Warabe near Gwoza town in Borno state on the night of Sunday May 4. They opened fire in the village before taking away eight girls between ages 12 and 15. News reports said the attackers then invaded a village five kilometres away and abducted three more girls.On Monday Boko Haram which has waged a five-year violent campaign to impose Islamic law across Nigeria claimed responsibility for the abduction of the students attending school in Chibok. "I have kidnapped the girls. I will sell them on the market in the name of Allah" said a man reputed to be Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau in a 57-minute video obtained by the Agence France Presse news agency."I'll sell them as slaves in the name of Allah. There is a market where they sell human beings'' said the man on the video. "I said that Western education must stop. Girls must leave school and get married" the man said. "I would give a 12-year-old girl in marriage; I would give in marriage even a 9-year-old girl." last week some parents and community leaders of Chibok have expressed their fear that the abducted girls were taken abroad to neighbouring Cameroon and Chad and that some of them have been forced to convert to Islam and marry Muslim men. Other reports given to the BBC say a "bridegroom" of a girl has been spotted a price of 2000 Naira or about US $12.50 has been quoted. Of the 230 girls kidnapped from the Chibok boarding school at least 165 of them are Christian according to a list of names and a statement released Sunday May 4 by a former chairman of an affiliate of the Christian Association of Nigeria. Neither government nor school authorities verified the accuracy of the list.The statement issued by evangelist Matthew Owojaiye said Chibok in the North-Eastern Nigerian State of Borno is 90 percent Christian the implication being that the mass abduction was a religiously motivated crime. The Chibok mass kidnapping has prompted anger across Africa's most populous nation. Hundreds of people mostly women marched in Abuja the capital and other major cities such as Kano and Lagos calling on the government to do more to rescue the girls. President Goodluck Jonathan is under intense pressure at home and from around the world to track down the kidnappers and rescue the hostages. U.S. President Barack Obama has offered and Nigeria has accepted American military and law-enforcement assistance.The disappearance of the girls has generated headlines around the world and fueled a social-media storm around the tag #bringbackourgirls – at a moment when Nigeria is preparing to host the World Economic Forum on Africa a gathering of 900 world business leaders. On Tuesday May 6 Egypt's Al-Azhar mosque one of the world's most prominent Sunni institutions of higher learning issued a statement calling on Boko Haram to release the girls. Boko Haram's action "does not relate to the noble teachings of Islam in any way" the statement said. The UN human rights office warned on Tuesday May 6 that the threatened sale into slavery of hundreds of schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram Islamists may constitute a crime against humanity."We are deeply concerned about the outrageous claims made in a video believed to be by the leader of Boko Haram in Nigeria yesterday in which he brazenly says he will sell the abducted schoolgirls 'in the market' and 'marry them off' referring to them as 'slaves'" said Rupert Colville spokesman for UN rights chief Navi Pillay.Yet such kidnappings are not new Dr. Pogu Chibok leader of the Chibok Elders Forum told World Watch Monitor. ''They [Islamists] have been doing it for years" he said. "They have been kidnapping girls and they have been marring them off to their members forcibly. It is just because of what happened in Chibok that brought the phenomenon to international arena and it is now being known by everybody." Deadly attacks carried out on an almost daily basis by Boko Haram have claimed more than 1500 lives since January raising criticism of the Nigerian army's ability to deal with the insurgency. On April 28 four people were killed and several more injured after Boko Haram attacked Gubla village in Adamawa state. A Church of the Brethren known as Ekklesiyar Yan'uwa a Nigeria; as well as the pastor's residence several neighbouring houses were also set on fire by assailants who sprayed bullets while storming the village around midnight local sources said. Despite a year-long state of emergency and the deployment of army to the region the government seems to have lost control of the country particularly in northeastern Nigeria a community leader said in a message sent to World Watch Monitor. ''As I am writing this we heard that the major road from Madagali to Gowza down to Bama is under the control of the insurgency since people cannot travel that road without being kidnapped" the source said. His name is being withheld to preserve his safety. ''Christians in these areas are suffering everyday as most of them are hiding and sleeping in the bush. The insurgency is moving from one village to the other without facing any resistance. I fear that if urgent action is not taken what is happening in Central Africa and Southern Sudan will soon be the vents in north-eastern Nigeria'' the source wrote.

Why Christians are under pressure to exit Iraq.] [ King Abd Allah Arabia Saudita Benjamin Netanyahu [ noi non possiamo sperare che i satanisti USA migliorino il pianeta perché loro si sono troppo impegnati troppo bene nel rovinarlo! ] Published June 13 2014. A population of 1.2 million in the 1990's reduced to 300000. Internally displaced Iraqi girl holding a children's Bible. Kurdistan November 2007. World Watch Monitor. BBC reports have described ISIS ambitions to create an Islamist caliphate spreading from northern Iraq across to north-west Syria. If ISIS can hold Mosul and consolidate its presence there it will have taken a giant step towards its goal of creating an Islamist region controlled by insurgents that connects Iraq and Syria. Apart from the overall population being targeted in the past there has also been ISIS violence explicitly aimed at Christians. Before this week's attacks about 300000 Christians were estimated to live in Iraq out of more than 1.2 million at the beginning of the 1990s. Since then large numbers have either fled abroad (Jordan Lebanon and Syria) or to the northern Kurdish region as a result of the severe anti-Christian violence; e.g. church attacks kidnappings killings robberies rapes and threats. This exodus of Christians means a loss of pluralism and an increase of intolerance in an already divided Iraqi society. The Archbishop of Mosul Amel Nona said that in the 11 years following the 2003 US-led overthrow of Iraq's President Saddam Hussein Christians in Mosul had declined from 35000 to 3000. This week Mosul's last remaining Christians had left their homes he said. Describing reports of attacks to four churches and a monastery in Mosul the Archbishop said "We received threats… [and] now all the faithful have fled the city. I wonder if they will ever return there." Some reports however say Christians have already returned to Mosul while other sources claim that all have fled and are unlikely to return.An organisation partnering with Christians in Iraq has told World Watch Monitor that some families who fled Mosul decided to return due to being unable to find refuge and fearing street fights between the Iraqi Army and the ISIS forces "some families mentioned it is better to die at home than staying on streets." Chaldean Priest Qais Kage told Fides Agency "The advance of the ISIS militiamen is favoured by large tribes and Sunnis clans. What happened in Mosul is significant such a big city cannot fall in a few hours without support from within. The chaos and political division of the country due to sectarian conflicts promotes the advance of the militants who have come from outside the Iraqi army has left everything in their hands.". Guard protecting a church in a suburb of Baghdad. The Iraqi government ordered concrete walls to be put around churches for protection. December 2011. World Watch Monitor. Kurdistan and the rest of Iraq. Iraq is divided in two parts the semi-autonomous Kurdish region in the North officially governed by the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) based in Erbil and the large remaining Arab part controlled by the Iraqi Government in Baghdad. Kurds and Arabs have their own languages and culture. Most of Iraq's oil resources are found near Kirkuk and Mosul the border areas between the Kurdish region and Arab Iraq and these are amongst the most violent places of Iraq. Christians are caught here in the crossfire of two different battles one for a Kurdish autonomous country and one for a religious cleansing of Iraq by Islamic terrorist groups who wish to make the country purely Islamic. The Kurdish aspiration for sovereignty - a desire three Sunni provinces in Arab Iraq have expressed as well - could well be one of the most destabilising factors for Iraq. Fleeing to Kurdistan. A group of internally displaced Iraqis waiting to receive relief. Kurdistan March 2009. World Watch Monitor. While the north of Iraq has been developing into a more and more dangerous place for Christians those who flee to the Kurdish region are now considered refugees inside Iraq. As refugees they face high unemployment and inadequate housing plus difficulty in finding schooling (especially university) for their children inadequate medical care and monthly food rations due to registration problems and discrimination. ISIS increased extremist Islamic pressures. Iraq remains at number four of the 50 countries listed on the World Watch List ranking the most difficult nations for Christians to live. The list is published annually by Open Doors International a charity supporting Christians worldwide who live under pressure because of their faith. The situation for Christians in central and south Iraq is as bad as last year however the north is developing into a more and more dangerous place for Christians. The main persecution 'engine' in Iraq says Open Doors is Islamic extremism. Islamic extremist groups desire a religious cleansing of Iraq and wish to make the country purely Islamic. Since the US led invasion of Iraq in 2003 the situation has continuously deteriorated due to considerable levels of violence by Islamist militants and insurgent groups. Prohibited under Saddam Hussein Islamist political parties - Shiite and Sunni - have made their entry to politics and even constitute the majority in parliament. Since 2003 anti-Western and anti-Christian sentiments tend to go hand-in-hand. These Islamist groups have increased in number in the North under the influence of the civil war in Syria. One of their aims is fulfilling jihad and thus resulting in annihilation of the country's Christian population. This situation is aggravated by government impunity. According to Open Doors International in general Iraqi society has increasingly become more Islamic. There is an increase in social control of women the wearing of the headscarf and observance of Ramadan. Even Christian women in Baghdad and Mosul have been forced to veil themselves in order to move safely outside of their homes. Explanation of background of ISIS. The group ISIS is an Iraq and Syria-based Sunni extremist group. ISIS follows an extreme interpretation of Islam promotes sectarian violence and targets those with other opinions as infidels and apostates. In October 2004 ISIS-leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden. This made the group an affiliate of al-Qaeda. In the first year of the war in Syria late 2011 ISIS engaged in that war through one of the groups that originally assimilated into ISIS Jabhat al Nusra. Between the leaders of ISIS and al-Nusra grew a division. This led to a split between the two jihadist groups and later caused infighting between both groups. The current leader of ISIS is Ibrahim Awwad Ibrahim Ali al-Badri the man is also known as Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi or Abu Du'a. ISIS is said to have only some 2500 Iraqi and foreign members in Iraq and some 5000 in Syria both Syrians as well as many foreigners. ISIS also operates in Lebanon and Turkey. ISIS has undergone several name changes ranging from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) also known as Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS this abbreviation is mostly used) or in Iraq as Da'ash. Old man living in a monastery in Northern Iraq. World Watch Monitor. The role the Syrian conflict plays in Iraq. ISIS has said it wants to establish an Islamist-led state (or Caliphate) which straddles across both Iraq and Syria. The role of the civil war in Syria is significant it led to a rise in recruitment and funding of Al Qaeda inspired groups in Iraq in 2013. In the current instability in Syria the position of Islamist radicals and ant-Christian attitudes should not be underestimated according to Open Doors. ISIS is now better established in Syria so Syrians seem to be pressured to choose between Assad and Islamist radicals. From ISIS-controlled regions in Syria's northern city of Raqqa reports of Christians have emerged of them being given an ultimatum of converting to Islam being killed or signing a 'dhimmi contract'. The contract is an integral part of traditional Islamic sharia law dating back to medieval times and requiring non-Muslims in this instance Christians to pay protection money which only allows them to gather for worship in churches. Under the dhimmi contract public expressions of Christian faith are not allowed. These prohibitions include Christian wedding and funeral processions; ringing of church bells; praying in public and scripture being read out loud for Muslims to hear; Christian symbols like crosses cannot be displayed openly; churches and monasteries cannot be repaired or restored irrespective if damage was collateral or intentional; and Christians are also not allowed to make offensive remarks about Muslims or Islam. The dhimmi contract also enforces an Islamic dress code like the veiling for women and commercial and dietary regulations including a ban on alcohol. According to Open Doors about 20 Christian leaders have signed to contract in Syria. If they keep these rules and live as dhimmis they will be protected. If not they will be 'put to the sword'.

King Abd Allah Arabia Saudita Benjamin Netanyahu [ se voi non imparate ad essere amici e se non imparate a fare una politica assolutamente autonoma svincolata da USA? nessuno di noi potrà sopravvivere! ] [ The lessons of Kim Jong-Wook. Published June 20 2014 by World Watch Monitor. Analysis. North Korea seen through barbed wire at the China border. Open Doors International. Last week the Democratic People's Republic of Korea rejected a request from South Korea to hold discussions about the fate of Kim Jong-Wook. The DPRK in late May sentenced Kim to spend the rest of his life in a labor camp. In its response to South Korea's plea the North said Kim had been tried and convicted properly – case closed. Kim's chances of leaving North Korea alive are slim at best and his arrest and subsequent sentencing already has had fatal consequences for others in North Korea. His case provides a window to the intensity of religious persecution in the DPRK a country that has held the No. 1 spot on the World Watch List of the most oppressive countries for Christians since the list was created 12 years ago. "In most countries there is a mixture of different persecution engines" the 2014 World Watch List says. "In North Korea there is one all-encompassing strong persecution engine excluding all other possible engines Communist oppression." What happened. Kim Jong-Wook speaking to North Korean televsion in February. North Korea video image via KBS. As a missionary Kim operated from the Chinese border city Dandong where he provided shelter food and other aid to North Korean refugees who slipped over the border seeking relief from the chronic famine of their country. Kim also taught the refugees from the Bible. North Korean agents who infiltrated his network convinced him to come to North Korea. On Oct. 8 he entered the DPRK expecting to find out what had happened to some refugees with whom he had lost touch. Instead he was immediately. A list of recent known arrests of foreign missionaries. •Kenneth Bae Korean-American arrested in North Korea in November 2012. Charged with carrying propaganda materials and plotting to overthrow the government. Sentenced to 15 years hard labor. •Robert Park Korean-American crossed the North Korean border on Christmas 2009 to protest genocide and other crimes against humanity in North Korea. He was held for 43 days and severely tortured. •John Short Australian arrested in North Korea in February for leaving Christian pamphlets behind near a Buddhist temple. He was released two weeks later after apologizing. •Kim Jong-Wook South Korean missionary lured to North Korea by secret agents in October 2013 and arrested. Charged with attempting to 'overthrow the regime' and spying for South Korea. Sentenced to life in prison. arrested and interrogated. It's likely he was tortured. In February Kim told assembled North Korean television cameras he had spied for the South Korean government and had given money to North Koreans to set up 500 underground churches and attempt to overthrow the North Korean regime. After the May 30 trial the North Korean state media reported prosecutors had sought the death penalty for Kim but the court imposed the life sentence after the pastor had "sincerely repented." Archenemies. During the North Korean war with South Korea and the United States in the early 1950s many North Korean Christians made a run for the South. Ever since North Korea has linked Christianity with its two enemies and followers of Jesus have been considered traitors. After the war tens of thousands of Christians were arrested put to death or sentenced to hard labor. A small remnant took their faith underground. In North Korea to be Christian is to be disloyal and in North Korea disloyalty to the regime is the greatest sin. Evidence of this fact of North Korean life has surfaced in recent months. Kim was pressured and probably tortured to give up the names of dozens of contacts many of whom had become Christians through his ministry. Sources in North Korea have confirmed that some of them were murdered and others were incarcerated in prisons and labor camps. In both detention facilities people are starved tortured and the death rate is extremely high. "I was locked up for years in Camp 25 near Chongjin" says a North Korean refugee whose name like all others in this article is being withheld for safety's sake. "I will never forget the prisoners who were too weak to continue their work. The guards would pick them up and put them on an automatic belt that threw them in a large oven while the prisoners were still alive." Trained spies. Kim is not the only fish caught in the government's net. In August 2011 in Dandong a South Korean Christian heavily involved in helping North Koreans escape was murdered by a DPRK agent armed with a poisoned needle. A few weeks later the South Korean intelligence agency arrested a North Korean refugee who was carrying poison and needles. In China a missionary was hit by an empty passenger bus; the driver was not caught. Some cases are never publicized out of concern for the safety of relatives and others connected to them. "We all know not all refugees are genuineja" says a missionary working for one of the several organizations working near the Chinese border. "We know from those who are sincere and from secret agents who have defected that the North Korean regime has dispatched hundreds of trained spies." One DPRK agent sent undercover to China to pose as an escapee once spoke to an informant working for the North Korean National Security Agency – someone trained to uncover religious people. The agent who later defected told U.S. researchers for a 2008 report that the informant had been trained to look for signals "such as a person who remains silent with closed eyes and meditates or when habitual smokers or drinkers quit smoking or drinking all of a sudden. These people should be targets to be watched closely." Fierce security apparatus. To keep an eye on Christians and other citizens North Korea maintains four instruments of surveillance The National Security Agency; the Public Safety Agency; the neighborhood unit; and the Communist Party. "We gave instructions to the neighborhood unit and the Primary Party Committee to watch certain [Christian] people" said one ex-agent of the Public Safety Agency. "If an informant did a good job we made sure he received a better job." All information is saved in the agency's resident registration dossiers which contains information on family backgrounds past religious activities and political propensities. The National Security Agency coordinates efforts to uncover "reactionary elements" and "anti-government" forces within North Korea. Arrested Christians often are transferred to the agency for further investigation. "They were all executed" said one former agent who was in charge of tracking down a certain group of "religious" people. "Things like possessing religious books sharing one's faith with others or preaching cannot exist because they undermine the Kim Jong-Il regime. All we need is one bit of evidence such as the Bible with someone's name on it. If only a Bible is found the NSA leaves it until the real owner shows up." It can be difficult to stay one step ahead of the law. "I heard the story of a man who knew he would be arrested for Bible possession" said one refugee. "The Bible was such a treasured possession for him that he gave it to his sister. She suspected the police would search her house too and she hid the Bible in a concrete tile which she placed in her kitchen. But the officers knew what they were looking for spotted the new tile found the Bible and took her away also." Heavy price. In a country of 25 million people estimates of the number of North Koreans who live as secret Christians range from 200000 to 400000. They are the heirs of nearly 70 years of severe persecution. One of them is Kim Jong Wook. "He must live under an enormous amount of guilt" said one South Korean missionary. "He made the mistake to trust the wrong people he was arrested and dozens others also. People were killed families put into concentration camps. His case reminds me of Rev. Ahn Song-Woon. He was also lured into a trap and arrested. He received a prison sentence disappeared from the radar for a while and then suddenly came back to the surface as the assistant-pastor of one of North Korea's showcase churches. He did that for a couple of years and then committed suicide. I am afraid that his may become the exact same fate of missionary Kim. They will never let him go. He knows too much about North Korea's National Security Agency."

King Abd Allah Arabia Saudita Benjamin Netanyahu [ c'è chi crede che soltanto la sua civiltà è quella giusta quindi lui si prepara in modi diversi a fare il pensiero dominante! a fare il genocidio di tutti gli altri che non sono come lui! ] MA IO NON CREDO CHE QUESTA PERSONA POSSA DIMORARE NELLA GIUSTIZIA! ECCO PERCHé IO HO DECISO DI IMPOSTARE TUTTI I MIEI DISCORSI POLITICI COME RAZIONALMENTE FONDATI COME UN AGNOSTICO POTREBBE FARE. PERCHé IL DECALOGO IN CHIAVE RELIGIOSA è SEMPRE LA LEGGE NATURALE IN CHIAVE LAICA.. QUINDI ESSERE SECOLARE è come CAPITALISMO IL COMUNISMO! come LA FALSa TEORIA DELLA EVOLUZIONE queste sono SECOLARI! IL SECOLARISMO? NON CI RIGUARDA! [ Malaysia refuses Church right to appeal ban on use of 'Allah'. Published June 25 2014 by Matt George. Kuala Lumpur Malaysia. World Watch Monitor. Almost eight years after the Malaysian Catholic newspaper the Herald first sought to overthrow a government ban on it using the word 'Allah' for 'God' in its publication the judicial appeal process appears to have ended in failure. A federal court in Kuala Lumpur ruled on June 23 that it would not grant the Catholic church permission to appeal against the decision. The court decided in October 2013 that only Malay Muslims had an exclusive right to use the word 'Allah' even though the word precedes the birth of Islam. The government's order allowing only Muslims to use the word "Allah" is particularly frustrating to Christians in multiracial Malaysia a nation once tolerant of all creeds. The indigenous Sabah and Sarawak people who constitute 70% of the country's Christian population have been using the word in their theological vocabulary -- both in worship in the Malay language or in written form in the Malay Bible the Alkitab -- for more than 100 years. The church stands to defend its legitimate right to freedom of worship has over the years led to punitive arson attacks against churches threats to both burn and seize the Bible by the state's Islamic authorities amid other acts of provocation. The Christian Federation of Malaysia voiced its disappointment yesterday at the federal court's decision. It said "Simple justice would have mandated an appeal to rectify the many incorrect and inaccurate statements and observations of the Court of Appeal." Rev. Dr Hermen Shastri Secretary General of the Council of Churches described the decision of the highest court of the land.He told World Watch Monitor that while there was little legal recourse left to the Catholic church it would probably take the extraordinary step of asking the federal court to review its own judgment so as to uphold constitutional guarantees of religious freedom.Amnesty International responded with a statement that the "Allah" ban should be scrapped. "Malaysia's ban on Christians using the word 'Allah' to refer to God is an abuse against free speech…The idea that non-Muslims could face prosecution for using a particular word is deeply disturbing" said its Malaysia researcher Hazel Galang-Folli. "This ban... risks further inflaming religious tensions in Malaysia by denying its people the right to freedom of religion." The overwhelming public opinion of Christians in the country who took to social media to express their disappointment was that the federal court should have allowed the church leave to appeal especially since three of the judges on the seven-member Bench dissented against the decision. Immediately after the verdict the Malaysian Government declared that Christians who form about 10% of the mainly Malay-Muslim population of 30 million could still use the word Allah in church since the ban only applied to the Herald. A government statement said "Malaysia is a multi-faith country and it is important that differences are managed peacefully in accordance with the rule of law and through dialogue mutual respect and compromise." It added that the government remains committed to its negotiated 'ten-point solution'- first announced in 2011 - to resolve difference in views between Christians and Muslims. A key element of this declaration emphasises that Christians are allowed to print import and distribute Bibles in the Malay language. The official pronouncements have done little to appease Christian leaders such as Dr Shastri who fear this latest federal court ruling will only strengthen extremist voices of Malay-Muslim extremists whose militant actions have brought little censure from the Government or the forces of law. These show contempt for legal authority and the leadership of Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak. Perdana Putra - government building housing the offices of Prime Minister. Kuala Lumpur Malaysia World Watch Monitor. Six months after the forced entry into (and seizure of more than 300 copies of the scripture from) the Bible Society of Malaysia the Islamic Religious Department of the state of Selangor and the Islamic Religious Council of the same state have refused to return the books despite being asked to do so by the Attorney General and the Prime Minister.The Islamic authorities have instead hinted that the 321 Bibles will be destroyed.The Bible Society said such an act would be abhorrent. Its President Bishop Ng Moon Hing in a statement said "Bibles are religious books of the Christian community. Under what civil law do (they) purport to have the authority to even suggest such an act?"Dr Shastri said the Islamic authorities were demonstrating a dangerous disregard for the law and the federal court decision will further blur the demarcation between Islamic jurisdiction in public life and civil laws. He said the ruling did not address the key issues of constitutional rights religious freedom and whether the government had the power to regulate sacred books. Dr Shastri emphasised that the Bible had been translated into many languages just as Hindu scriptures and the Koran into English and other languages for the sake of humanity. "The State has no right to regulate or contain religious practices." The decision was welcomed by extreme nationalist Malay groups who warned the Catholic church to stop issuing statements or challenging the authority of the federal court. One group that propagates Islamic ties said the ruling confirmed its view that Malaysia was an Islamic state and not a secular one. The Muslim extremist groups also maintained this week that the Allah word should be expunged from all Malay-language Bibles. Religious provocation and persecution has become a constant feature of life in Malaysia. In recent weeks the country was gripped by a debate on hudud – the Islamic law that prescribes stoning to death and cutting off limbs for crimes – which the opposition Islamic Party PAS wants to introduce in the state of Kelantan. Extreme Islamist groups favour its enactment and significantly say that the law should also apply to non-Muslims. Earlier this month Islamic religious authorities suddenly interrupted a Chinese funeral and seized the body of a 38-year-old waitress. It was claimed that she had converted to Islam when she was a teenager and therefore she should not be buried in a Taoist ceremony. Her family contested this; four days later she was buried - as originally planned - on being declared to be in fact a non-Muslim. In May a civil court ruled that a Hindu convert to Islam should return his six-year-old son to the Hindu mother. To date he has not done so because it is claimed he obtained custody of the child from a Muslim Sharia court. Such inter-faith battles based on conflicting legal systems are polarising the nation as well as appearing to make a mockery of the country's legal systems. Some are concerned that the federal court's reluctance to test constitutional guarantees of religious freedom will encourage Malay-Muslim extremists to further push out the boundaries of Islam and shrink the space for other faith groups freedom to worship.

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